Генри Кендалл (Henry Kendall)




Текст оригинала на английском языке

Other Poems (1871-82). From the Forests


Introductory verses for "The Sydney University Review", 1881.

Where in a green, moist, myrtle dell
 The torrent voice rings strong
And clear, above a star-bright well,
 I write this woodland song.

The melodies of many leaves
 Float in a fragrant zone;
And here are flowers by deep-mossed eaves
 That day has never known.

I'll weave a garland out of these,
 The darlings of the birds,
And send it over singing seas
 With certain sunny words—

With certain words alive with light
 Of welcome for a thing
Of promise, born beneath the white,
 Soft afternoon of Spring.

The faithful few have waited long
 A life like this to see;
And they will understand the song
 That flows to-day from me.

May every page within this book
 Be as a radiant hour;
Or like a bank of mountain brook,
 All flower and leaf and flower.

May all the strength and all the grace
 Of Letters make it beam
As beams a lawn whose lovely face
 Is as a glorious dream.

And may that strange divinity
 That men call Genius write
Some deathless thing in days to be,
 To fill those days with light.

Here where the free, frank waters run,
 I pray this book may grow
A sacred candour like the sun
 Above the morning snow.

May noble thoughts in faultless words—
 In clean white diction—make
It shine as shines the home of birds
 And moss and leaf and lake.

This fair fresh life with joy I hail,
 And this belief express,
Its days will be a brilliant tale
 Of effort and success.

Here ends my song; I have a dream
 Of beauty like the grace
Which lies upon the land of stream
 In yonder mountain place.





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